Computer Science
Scientific paper
Aug 2001
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2001e%26psl.190..251h&link_type=abstract
Earth and Planetary Science Letters, Volume 190, Issue 3-4, p. 251-266.
Computer Science
57
Scientific paper
Seismic reflection and refraction data acquired on four transects spanning the Southeast Greenland rifted margin and Greenland-Iceland Ridge (GIR) provide new constraints on mantle thermal structure and melting processes during continental breakup in the North Atlantic. Maximum igneous crustal thickness varies along the margin from >30 km in the near-hotspot zone (<500 km from the hotspot track) to ~18 km in the distal zone (500-1100 km). Magmatic productivity on summed conjugate margins of the North Atlantic decreases through time from 1800+/-300 to 600+/-50 km3/km/Ma in the near-hotspot zone and from 700+/-200 to 300+/-50 km3/km/Ma in the distal zone. Comparison of our data with the British/Faeroe margins shows that both symmetric and asymmetric conjugate volcanic rifted margins exist. Joint consideration of crustal thickness and mean crustal seismic velocity suggests that along-margin changes in magmatism are principally controlled by variations in active upwelling rather than mantle temperature. The thermal anomaly (ΔT) at breakup was modest (~100-125°C), varied little along the margin, and transient. Data along the GIR indicate that the potential temperature anomaly (125+/-50°C) and upwelling ratio (~4 times passive) of the Iceland hotspot have remained roughly constant since 56 Ma. Our results are consistent with a plume-impact model, in which (1) a plume of radius ~300 km and ΔT of ~125°C impacted the margin around 61 Ma and delivered warm material to distal portions of the margin; (2) at breakup (56 Ma), the lower half of the plume head continued to feed actively upwelling mantle into the proximal portion of the margin; and (3) by 45 Ma, both the remaining plume head and the distal warm layer were exhausted, with excess magmatism thereafter largely confined to a narrow (<200 km radius) zone immediately above the Iceland plume stem. Alternatively, the warm upper mantle layer that fed excess magmatism in the distal portion of the margin may have been a pre-existing thermal anomaly unrelated to the plume.
Bernstein Sergei
Christian Larsen Hans
Dahl-Jensen Trine
Detrick Robert S.
Holbrook Steven W.
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